- Incorporate community time at youth gatherings. Rick Beckwith, when he was the Area Director of NW Fairfax Young Life incorporated a community builder called “Family Time” during their Bible study. During family time, students would break up into smaller groups and share about life and what the Lord was teaching them. Then, they would get back together as a whole group and share. Knowing some of the students who were apart of that time, I know that it was there that students felt connected to others on a deeper, real level. It was also there that they develop life long bonds with each other that still exist today. For me, being an outsider looking into those relationships, I wish I was apart of something like that when I was younger. It can be and has proven to be a long term benefit and because of this, I sought to incorporate that or variations of those times into our ministry.
- Make Cedar Run events, can’t miss events. As I mentioned above, students knew each other but they didn’t really know each other well enough to feel comfortable with one another outside of a church setting. So, I felt that the best way to draw students in and help begin to bridge that gap was to create opportunities for them to be together. But, if students didn’t really feel comfortable with each other, I had to do more than just an event. I had to create an air of excitement within the group that would cause students to come out regardless of who was coming or not coming. Because of this, the leaders and I created a mantra that whenever we did a Cedar Run event or program, that it was a can not miss event! That, if you came, you knew something big was going to happen that you couldn’t miss. The excitement in the air and the relational effort our leaders made with the students caused students to come out. Once they were there with the other students, they began the process of building relationships with each other. Those relationships grew and flourished because we provided avenues for them to relate to each other in shared experiences.
- Get students interacting with each other outside of Church. A key to this is finding a commonality between the students. The best way to find that commonality is if you have leaders actively investing in students. Once you find a common interest the students share, you can begin to build those interest into friendships. For example, we had a bunch of students really into football. So, a few leaders and I set up a fantasy football league. We got 12 youth and leaders together and created this league that has now gone on for many years (even with most of them now being in college or beyond) and has been a great source of fellowship and community within the group and that unity has caused us to spawn even more leagues. The key here is that we found students who had something in common and got them to feel apart of something.
- Go on a trip together. One of the first activities I did when I started at Cedar Run was go on their annual mission trip. Many ministers will tell you going away with your students for an overnight or a weekend would take several months of contact work with these same students to get the same amount of impact. It is because you are spending at least 24 – 48 continuous hours with them. So much can happen during that time. I can tell you that my weeklong trip with these students I hardly knew would have probably taken me years to build. Without a doubt, it was the best thing I could have ever done with our youth to win the right with them and start laying down the foundations of deep and real community together. Our youth came back pumped and excited about the ministry we did on that trip and just as excited about the relationships they developed with each other and myself.
- Identify some ways you can develop community in your church. Is it one of the ideas listed above or something different?
- After you have identified a few community builders, start planning them out and work on building community.
I was talking with a parent just the other day about how difficult it is for her student to be engaged in community and real reciprocal relationships. This difficulty knows no bounds. The challenge is at church, at school, and in the community. There is a major disconnect that we must be aware of in order to build lasting and impacting relationships with one another to grow together in Jesus. Community is an important element of our walks with God in that we cannot grow fully in Him the way he intended without deep and meaningful relationships with one another. Community matters, because discipleship is communal in its nature. It takes all of us working together to make disciples in our churches, in our communities, and in our world. This is a subject that has been on my mid a lot lately, Discipleship is Communal: http://robbiepruitt.blogspot.com/2009/12/disciple…
Great post Tom! This is a very important topic.